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The Water Cooler
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Can a Helicopter use x-ray equipment to find guns in homes?
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<blockquote data-quote="Billybob" data-source="post: 2029628" data-attributes="member: 1294"><p>Who needs x-rays? Got drones?</p><p></p><p></p><p>[The air force document explains that the air force will be overseeing the deployment of its own military surveillance drones within the borders of the US; that it may keep video and other data it collects with these drones for 90 days without a warrant &#8211; and will then, retroactively, determine if the material can be retained &#8211; which does away for good with the fourth amendment in these cases. While the drones are not supposed to specifically "conduct non-consensual surveillance on on specifically identified US persons", according to the document, the wording allows for domestic military surveillance of non-"specifically identified" people (that is, a group of activists or protesters) and it comes with the important caveat, also seemingly wholly unconstitutional, that it may not target individuals "unless expressly approved by the secretary of Defense"....</p><p></p><p>What happens to those images, that audio? "Distribution of domestic imagery" can go to various other government agencies without your consent, and that imagery can, in that case, be distributed to various government agencies;...]</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/21/coming-drone-attack-america" target="_blank">http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/21/coming-drone-attack-america</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Billybob, post: 2029628, member: 1294"] Who needs x-rays? Got drones? [The air force document explains that the air force will be overseeing the deployment of its own military surveillance drones within the borders of the US; that it may keep video and other data it collects with these drones for 90 days without a warrant – and will then, retroactively, determine if the material can be retained – which does away for good with the fourth amendment in these cases. While the drones are not supposed to specifically "conduct non-consensual surveillance on on specifically identified US persons", according to the document, the wording allows for domestic military surveillance of non-"specifically identified" people (that is, a group of activists or protesters) and it comes with the important caveat, also seemingly wholly unconstitutional, that it may not target individuals "unless expressly approved by the secretary of Defense".... What happens to those images, that audio? "Distribution of domestic imagery" can go to various other government agencies without your consent, and that imagery can, in that case, be distributed to various government agencies;...] [url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/21/coming-drone-attack-america[/url] [/QUOTE]
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